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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although cerebral angiography should be approached with caution in the diagnosis of inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease there are some characteristic angiographic findings which may be helpful for classification and differential diagnosis. The proximal cerebral arteries are favourably affected by basal meningitis and thrombangiitis obliterans with resulting stenoses and occlusions. Whereas those inflammations originating from neighbouring skull structures mostly involve the intracavernous parts of the carotid artery, the tuberculous and mycotic arteritis prefer the supraclinoid carotid siphon. Peripheral vascular changes are found in luetic endangiitis, necrotizing and toxic angiitis and in collagenoses. Simultaneous involvement of the temporal arteries is of great diagnostic importance demonstrating the systemic character of the inflammatory process; in Horton's arteritis it can be a pathognomonic finding. Infectious endocarditis, some mycoses and malaria may lead to embolic occlusion of cerebral vessels. Mycotic aneurysms mostly have a broad base or a fusiform shape and do not prefer the localizations of congenital aneurysms. Angiographically, abscesses, tuberculomas and viral encephalitis may result in circumscribed hypervascularized areas. The characteristic angiographic findings are exemplified and discussed on the basis of 8 cases of inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease (tuberculosis, pneumococcal and unspecific bacterial meningitis, syphilis, mycosis, Takayasu-syndrome, panarteritis nodosa, temporal arteritis).
Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr Grenzgeb 1975 Dec
PMID:[Inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease: angiographic findings and distribution patterns (author's transl)]. 0 27

1. Extracellular deposits of cerebrosides and free fatty acids were found in the formaldehyde fixed frozen sections of the frontal lobe in 8 cases of Huntington's disease, in one case of the infantile form of Gaucher's disease, 2 cases of Krabbe's globoid cell leucodystrophy, 2 cases of metachromatic leucodystrophy, one case with multiple sclerosis, 2 cases with cerebral contusion and one case with bacterial meningitis. 2. The cerebroside deposits were present in the white matter as well as in the grey matter. 3. The significance of these findings in relation to their etiology is discussed.
Histochemistry 1978 Dec 13
PMID:A histochemical study in Huntington's disease and control cases. 8 73

Countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis was utilized in the study of 621 specimens of cerebrospinal fluid to determine the correlation of detection of viral antigens with the clinical diagnosis of aseptic meningitis and related viral infections. A panel of viral antisera was immunoelectrophoresed against 119 specimens from patients with suspected viral infections of the central nervous system (group I), 32 from patients with bacterial meningitis (group 2), and 470 from patients with no suspected infection of the nervous system (group 3). One or more precipitin bands were detected in 79% of specimens from group 1, 19% from group 2, and 4% from group 3. Paired acute- and convalescent-phase sera from 32 (78%) of 41 patients with precipitin bands detected by countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis demonstrated a fourfold or greater change in complement-fixing antibodies to the detected antigen. With refinements in antisera, countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis may become useful in the rapid laboratory diagnosis of viral infection of the central nervous system.
J Infect Dis 1978 Dec
PMID:Countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis in the diagnosis of viral infections of the central nervous system. 21 55

Cases of bacterial, non-tuberculous meningitis among Auckland children aged one month to 13 years were reviewed for the five year period September 1971 to September 1976. The aetiological agent was established in 203 of 227 cases. Haemophilus influenzae was the most frequent cause and together with Streptococcus pneumoniae accounted for all sequelae S. pneumoniae was responsible for most fatal cases. It is an unusually common cause of meningitis in Auckland, particularly in children under a year of age. Polynesians contracted bacterial meningitis almost four times as often as Europeans. For a Polynesian child the risk of death due to bacterial meningitis was 12 times that of European.
N Z Med J 1977 Dec 14
PMID:Bacterial meningitis in children. 27 67

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) immunoglobulins were measured in 62 normal children, in 9 children with purulent meningitis, and in 10 children with presumptive viral meningitis. The mean values in normal children were IgA 0, IgM 0, and IgG 0.84 +/- 1.4 mg/100 ml (+/- SD). The mean levels of all CSF immunoglobulins were raised in acute bacterial meningitis and were significantly greater than the levels found in viral meningitis. CSF IgM was 0.16 +/- 0.5 mg/100 ml in viral meningitis compared with 2.64 +/- 2.06 mg/100 ml in bacterial meningitis (P less than 0.01). However, these values overlapped to a considerable extent and, generally, measurement of CSF immunoglobulins did not enhance diagnostic accuracy in this group of children.
Arch Dis Child 1979 Dec
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid immunoglobulins in children. 53 1

Gas liquid chromatography was employed to detect lactic acid in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients suspected of having bacterial meningitis. The technique was found to be both rapid and reliable. Differentiation between aseptic, purulent, and partially treated bacterial meningitis was readily achieved. The effectiveness of therapy in bacterial meningitis was indicated by a rapid fall in the concentration of lactic acid.
J Clin Pathol 1977 Dec
PMID:Gas liquid chromatography in the rapid diagnosis of meningitis. 60 63

Forty-two patients were treated with intravenous cefoxitin, a new cephamycin antibiotic. These patients had postoperative abdominal sepsis (26), intrathoracic infections (6), urinary tract infections (5), gram-negative bacterial meningitis (2), septic arthritis (1), epidural abscess (1) and isolated septicemia (1). The antibacterial spectrum of cefoxitin was found to be one which included all gram-positive organisms except enterococci, most gram-negative organisms except Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and almost all of the important anaerobic organisms. The only five treatment failures included one patient with empyema and one with septic arthritis, both caused by Serratia marcescens, initially only moderately susceptible to cefoxitin, which subsequently developed increased resistance, two patients with contaminated intravenous catheters, and one patient with epidural abscess and cerebritis, who was treated late in the course. There was one serious clinical superinfection with P. aeruginosa. The drug levels noted in the pus and joint fluid were half to two-thirds of the simultaneous serum level. In inflamed meninges, up to 30% of the serum level was noted in the cerebrospinal fluid, and as the process resolved, 10 to 15% was noted. Toxicity of cefoxitin was mild and constituted skin rash in three patients (7%) and phlebitis in eight (19%).
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 1978 Dec
PMID:Use of cefoxitin, new cephalosporin-like antibiotic, in the treatment of aerobic and anaerobic infections. 74 74

The penetration of amoxicillin into cerebrospinal fluid (CFS) in the presence of meningeal inflammation was evaluated in patients with tuberculous meningitis. Serum and CSF concentrations of amoxicillin were measured at 2 h in nine patients who received a 1-g oral dose and at 1.5 and 4 h in ten patients who received a 2-g intravenous injection of sodium amoxicillin. After the oral dose, CSF concentrations ranged from 0.1 to 1.5 mug/ml. After the intravenous injection, CSF concentrations ranged from 2.9 to 40.0 mug/ml at 1.5 h and from 2.6 to 27.0 mug/ml at 4 h. These data on penetration suggest that parenterally administered sodium amoxicillin may be of value in the therapy of acute bacterial meningitis.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 1978 Dec
PMID:Penetration of amoxicillin into cerebrospinal fluid. 74 77

Cerebrospinal fluid and serum immunoglobulins were studied in 76 patients with acute meningitis of various aetiologies. This comparative study showed that the increase of CSF immunoglobulin levels was related to important modifications of the permeability of the blood-brain barrier (especially in case of bacterial meningitis) or to a local in situ production (particularly in case of "viral" meningitis). Results obtained allow us to draw a different biochemical pattern in purulent meningitis and acute lymphocytic meningitis.
Pathol Biol (Paris) 1976 Dec
PMID:[Immunoglobulins in the CSF during meningitis (author's transl)]. 79 89

Bacterial meningitis should in principle be easily accessible to chemotherapy. The results of treatment cannot, however, be regarded at all optimistically although in recent years the therapy has brought an improvement in prognosis. Astonishingly, the therapeutic recommendations in common use even today are already 20 years old, so that the more favorable treatment results must be attributed to an earlier and more accurate diagnosis. The neurological damage following survival of meningitis is considerable, in particular, capacity to remember and powers of concentration remain impaired. Examination of these patients before school and observation during their schooldays is therefore essential.
MMW Munch Med Wochenschr 1976 Dec 03
PMID:[Course and prognosis of acute bacterial meningitis in infancy in relation to age and individual disposition (author's transl)]. 82 4


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